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2022 Weather in Review: Fort Necessity National Battlefield

Fall foliage with the Great Meadows in the background
Great Meadows at Fort Necessity National Battlefield

NPS photo

In order to better understand ecosystem health in national parks, the Eastern Rivers and Mountains Network measures ecosystem "vital signs" in select national parks in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. One of those vital signs is weather and climate. Below is a summary of 2022 weather conditions at Fort Necessity National Battlefield.

This brief provides county-scale weather data from Fayette County, PA, including data from 1895–2022 (i.e., period of record). Data and analyses herein are courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Climate at a Glance Program.

Weather vs. Climate

First of all, what is the difference between weather and climate? Weather consists of the short-term (minutes to months) changes in the atmosphere. Weather is what is happening outside at this very moment, be it rain, snow, or just a warm sunny day. Climate is what you expect to see based on long-term patterns of over 30 years or more. An easy way to remember the difference is that climate is what you might expect, like a hot summer, and weather is what you get, like a warm rainy day.

The following information includes a discussion of 2022 weather placed in the context of long-term climate (i.e., how did 2022 compare to a "normal" year?).

2022 Summary

In all, temperatures in 2022 were near normal and precipitation was just above average. The year ended as the 54th warmest and 39th wettest since 1895 for Fayette County, PA. Data indicate that over the long term, annual average temperature and annual total precipitation have both increased (+0.04 °F per decade and +0.34 inches per decade, respectively).

Temperature

In total, 2022 was very close to a normal year in terms of temperature and ultimately ranked as the 54th warmest on record for the park (Figure 1). Eight months had higher than normal temperatures but a very cold January and October resulted in an annual average temperature that was only 0.2 °F above the long-term average (Table 1).

Figure 1. 2022 average annual and seasonal temperature rankings for Fayette County, PA.
Figure 1. Seasonal and annual temperature rankings for the park. An arrow at the top of the figure would represent the warmest year/season on record (since 1895); at the bottom, the coldest year/season on record. Winter = Jan–Mar, Spring = Apr–June, Summer = July–Sept, Autumn = Oct–Dec.

Table 1. Monthly and annual average temperature and departure from long-term averages. Departures from average show how different 2022 was compared to relevant averages from 1895-2021.

Month/Year Average temperature (°F) Departure from
long-term average (°F)
January 24.2 −3.6
February 31.7 +2.3
March 41.2 +2.8
April 48.0 −1.1
May 61.3 +2.2
June 67.2 +0.1
July 71.4 +0.5
August 70.1 +0.7
September 62.8 −0.6
October 48.8 −3.4
November 43.0 +2.1
December 31.6 +0.3
2022 50.1 +0.2

Precipitation

In total, the park experienced a year that was wetter than normal, with most seasons having preciptiation slighly more than is typical (Figure 2). The year ended as the 39th wettest on record. In all, 48.5 inches of precipitation fell, more than 3 inches above the long-term average (Table 2).

Figure 2. 2022 total annual and seasonal precipitation rankings for Fayette County, PA.
Figure 2. Seasonal and annual total precipitation rankings for the park. An arrow at the top of the figure would represent the wettest year/season on record (since 1895); at the bottom, the driest year/season on record. Winter = Jan–Mar, Spring = Apr–June, Summer = July–Sept, Autumn = Oct– Dec.

Table 2. Monthly and annual total precipitation and departure from long-term averages. Departures from average show how different 2022 was compared to relevant averages from 1895-2021.

Month/Year Total precipitation (in.) Departure from
long-term average (in.)
January 4.07 +0.57
February 4.97 +2.00
March 2.37 −1.54
April 4.26 +0.35
May 5.58 +1.26
June 3.84 −0.88
July 4.85 +0.11
August 4.99 +0.82
September 3.83 +0.32
October 2.64 −0.46
November 4.07 +0.94
December 3.07 −0.36
2022 48.54 +3.13

Temperature and Precipitation Trends
(1895-2022)

Data for Fayette County, PA indicate that annual average temperature has increased approximately 0.04 °F per decade and annual total precipitation has increased approximately 0.34 inches per decade since 1895 (Figure 3).

National Park Service scientists have forecast future changes in climate too. Models estimate that by 2100, annual average temperature at the park will increase by 3.1–9.2 °F (from a best-case to worst-case scenario, respectively). Annual total precipitation is expected to increase by 6–12% (see Gonzalez et al., 2018 for details).
Figure 3. Line graph of annual average temperature (°F) and annual total precipitation (in.) for Fayette County, PA from 1895–2022 showing increases in both parameters.
Figure 3. Annual average temperature (°F) and annual total precipitation (in.) from 1895–2022 for Fayette County, PA. Dashed lines represent linear estimates of change.

Climate Change

Today's rapid climate change challenges national parks in ways we've never seen before. Wildlife migrations are altered, increasingly destructive storms threaten cultural resources and park facilities, habitat is disrupted—the list goes on. Go to the NPS Climate Change site to discover how climate change is affecting our nation's treasures, what the National Park Service is doing about it, and how you can help.

For more information, contact Mid-Atlantic Network Biologist, Jeb Wofford or Eastern Rivers and Mountains Network Program Manager, Matt Marshall. Data included in this article were obtained from NOAA's NClimDiv dataset (version v1.0.0-20230106).

Fort Necessity National Battlefield

Last updated: December 20, 2023